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Gian's avatar

A fraction of people, mostly in rich countries, is able to eat much better than anytime in history, with much more meat, eggs, protein and other supplements, exercises etc. The Hollywood stars utilize the best of health knowledge that is actually practical.

YOUR DOCTOR KLOVER's avatar

This is a really thoughtful interrogation of a deceptively simple question. I appreciated how you separate life expectancy gains from slower aging and highlight the competing effects: better control of infectious disease and acute mortality on one hand, versus rising cardiometabolic burden (and widening inequities) on the other. It’s hard to claim we’re aging more slowly if morbidity is being delayed for some while accelerating for others.

The other strength is the emphasis on measurement: without clarity on what we mean by rate of aging (functional capacity, multimorbidity trajectories, frailty, disability-free life years, biomarker composites), the debate becomes semantic. Your framing pushes readers toward the right endpoints (healthspan and compression of morbidity) rather than headline lifespan alone.

It left me thinking the most honest answer is: in certain populations we’ve gotten better at postponing death, but slowing the biology of aging at scale remains unproven, and likely depends more on policy, environment, and prevention than on any single breakthrough

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